URBAN DESIGN
UPDATE
Newsletter of the Institute for Urban Design March/April 2004 Vol. 20 No. 2 BIDS TAKE ON BOLD NEW PROJECTS IN SEATTLE AND NEW YORK Are Business Improvement Districts taking over the cities of the world? It would seem so from the just issued Business Improvement Districts, whose second edition (see review page 4) has now been released by International Downtown Association with Urban Land Institute. According to book author Lawrence Houstoun, Jr., there are over 400 BIDs in the U.S.A. today. And educated guesses state that another 400 are operating in Canadian cities. Estimates on BIDs in other parts of the world vary, but researcher Lorlene Hoyt at MIT has identified 1,200 worldwide. BIDs began to be formed in the 1980s by associations of merchants in cities no longer able to fund cleanup services. Now urban designers are providing services to BIDs in cities around the country. The Thompson Design Group, Boston, recognized for its pioneering work on the Grand Central Station BID in the mid-1990s, has since then worked on Lincoln Road, Miami Beach. David Feehan, President of the International Downtown Association, says that second generation BIDs are offering a host of new services not heretofore available. The Fashion BID in Los Angeles, in collaboration with two other local BIDs, is offering free storage space in public lockers to the homeless. A cleaner streetscape is now contributing to a boom in nearby residential development. Downtown Seattle BID, says Feehan, seeks to extend the monorail as an alternative to the now crumbling Alaska Highway. The new D.C. Partnership in Washington has undertaken a sophisticated data collection project on office vacancy and pedestrian activity. Daniel Biederman, Director of the Bryant Park Business Improvement District as well as President 34th Street Business Improvement District, says that BIDs are growing more sophisticated in mission with the Flatiron BID, the total is 60. For poetic audacity nothing matches the Santiago Calatrava - designed townhouses in the sky, being approved by Carl Weisbrod, who overseas the Lower Manhattan BID, and developed by Fellow Frank J. Sciame. Similar to BIDs but art-focused are such organizations as the Brooklyn Arts District where Frank Ghery, together with Fellow Hugh Hardy have been commissioned to design a $22 million building for theatre for a new audience. The city’s Economic Development Corporation will provide $6.2 million while the remaining $16 million will be raised by the 40-member board of the theatre. This fundraising capacity distinguishes the Arts District from the BID. It will be key to completing a $630 million master plan for the Arts District itself. Michael Weiss, Director, Metrotech Brooklyn, points out that their main planning mission since founding in 1991 has been safer, cleaner streets. BAM Arts District, on the other hand, has mission of raising funds for capital projects, such as planned library by Enrique Norten. He sees a shared purpose, however, in creating a multi-node downtown Brooklyn. To that end, Metrotech Brooklyn, will retain Streetscape designers to reanimate Fulton Mall, now coming into jurisdiction of Metrotech Brooklyn. Calatrava/Sciame Tower